Real estate matters: Are you selling? Here's what the buyer wants to see

Friday, July 25, 2008 at 4:02am

I spent some time in the past few weeks listening to friends who are thinking about moving across the country and buying a house.

What they’re telling me is that even though there is a seemingly endless list of houses for sale, not all home sellers are making the most of the house they’re trying to unload.

When it comes to putting your house up for sale, the big problem for most homeowners is thinking like a seller. Most homeowners think that the house that they lived in, and loved, is the house they’re trying to sell.

In fact, if your house is for sale you’ll have better luck selling it if you think first like a buyer, and then like a seller.

For example, it’s clear to me that the cable channels HGTV, Bravo and Discovery have changed the way home buyers think about home. What they want is something that has personality, is in good shape and is move-in ready. A myriad of television shows like Designed to Sell have convinced buyers that all homes for sale should — at the very least — have a fresh paint job, matching stuff and personality.

If your house is for sale and you haven’t repainted in the past 10 years and don’t have matching knickknacks on your coffee table, your house is going to look dated compared to a lot of the other houses in the neighborhood.

But that’s just the beginning. If a house is for sale and it doesn’t meet the needs of today’s buyers, no matter what price range, you’re going to have a hard time selling it.

The other day, I visited a house that’s been for sale for more than six months. It has the decorating thing down pat, right down to the two blue boys’ rooms and one pink girl’s room, but I instantly knew why this house hadn’t sold: The sellers had made a strategic mistake when they renovated the first floor.

The kitchen, dining room, and family room have big windows that face onto the lovely backyard and pool. But the order of the rooms is the kitchen on the left, huge dining room in the middle, and family room on the right. The family room, which is more casual, leads into a much more dressed-up formal living room.

When the owners redecorated, what they should have done was create one massive kitchen/family room, incorporating the kitchen and dining rooms. The family room should have been the dining room and the owners should have pulled up the ceramic tile and replaced it with hardwood floors to give the rooms a better flow.

No big deal, right? Someone buys the house for a steep discount and makes the change. Well, that’s ideally how it should work, but buyers today don’t want to take on big improvement projects. There are too many houses for sale where the flow already works well. They can buy a great house for a great price without having to commit to a lot of work.

Which leaves problem houses for sale as others get snapped up.

If you can’t remember how to think like a buyer, here are a few suggestions:

— Visit a few open houses in your neighborhood and price range to get a sense of what other sellers are doing.

— Try to imagine what you’d want in a house. How do you want to live?

— Talk with your agent about what kinds of properties and amenities she is looking for on behalf of her buyers.

— Talk to other buyers who are in the process of buying property.

— Visit model homes in new construction developments to get a sense of what developers are trying to showcase.

Once you’re thinking like a home buyer, you can use that information to help you retool as a home seller. How can you change your house so that when you list it for sale, there’s real interest from buyers? If you owned the house I saw last week, you might spend $10,000 to open up the wall from the kitchen, and switch out the dining room and family room.

But don’t go out and make major repairs or renovations to your home until you understand what impact those repairs or renovations will have on your ability to sell the home and recover the money you put into the home.

Just because your home could sell faster with a new kitchen, it doesn’t mean that you should go ahead and put in a new kitchen if the cost will be $65,000 but you would only be able to get the same amount from the sale (or less) if you had not installed the kitchen.

Remember, the trick to selling your house is to remove any possible objections a buyer might have to purchasing it. By thinking like a buyer, you’re much more likely to change your “house for sale” sign into one that says “sold.”

For me since your home is a major investment that should be protected TN is not the state.People need to be more protective of their investment so I would suggest such states as Fl, Texas and yes even Kentucky as they are all Homestead states. TN is not.

By:pandabear on 12/31/69 at 7:00

Point well taken, as Joy Ford well knows. God bless her and shame on Metro."bunker, bunker Bredeson"
"30563

By:u62bbs on 12/31/69 at 7:00

Please enlighten me eastnashville37207!! What is a Homestead state? 37206

By:girliegirl on 12/31/69 at 7:00

It means they can't take your home even if you file bankruptcy. He's refering to the Homestead Act. AZ has it.